There were 590,000 inhabitants in 1892, including 303,200 men. The predominance of men is explained by the annual influx of free and exiled migrants, thanks to this same migration, the population growth of the Transbaikal oblast was slightly higher than the population growth of the empire. The population was mostly located in 7 cities: Barguzin, Selenginsk, Troitskosavsk, Verkhneudinsk, Chita, Nerchinsk and Aksha, with another 750 settlements as well. Cossacks numbered 177,000, or 30.5% of the total population, while peasants numbered 166,000, 28.9% of the total population and foreigners numbered 170,000 (29%). The rest of the population was made up of townspeople, troops, convicts and exiled people, at 4% of the population. Curiously, almost the entire peasant population and more than 4/5 of all Cossacks were
Old Believers. Outside of Christianity,
Lama Buddhism was the most widespread, whose adherents were mostly
Buryats and the
Tungus,
shamanism was also practiced. By 1860 there were 157 Buddhist and shamanic temples, by the modern day this number decreased by 2/3. The border was guarded by the cossacks, while the peasant population tended to live along the river valleys of rivers like
Dzhida, Chikoya, Khilka, Onon and Argun.
Ethnic composition and population in 1897 The population according to the
1897 census was 672,037, consisting of 342,543 men and 329,494 women. Of these,
Orthodox Christians numbered 443,009, Buddhists numbered 174,227, and Old Believers numbered 36,623. The urban population was 42,778. ==References==